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Bologna Process - objectives and achievements Ms. Sirpa Moitus, FINEEC Mr. Kauko Hämäläinen Baku, 29 September 2015.

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Presentation on theme: "Bologna Process - objectives and achievements Ms. Sirpa Moitus, FINEEC Mr. Kauko Hämäläinen Baku, 29 September 2015."— Presentation transcript:

1 Bologna Process - objectives and achievements Ms. Sirpa Moitus, FINEEC Mr. Kauko Hämäläinen Baku, 29 September 2015

2 Bologna objectives Development of a system of easily readable and comparable degrees, designed to increase flexibility and transparency and enable students to have their qualifications recognised more widely. This will be aided by the adoption of a system of credits in the form of the European Credit Transfer System (ECTS) and the Diploma Supplement Adoption of a system based on three main cycles within higher education - Bachelors, Masters and Doctoral. Promotion of closer links between the European Higher Education Area (EHEA) and the European Research Area (ERA) Promotion of mobility of students, academics, researchers and administrative staff within higher education in Europe, and removal of obstacles to students outside of Europe Promotion of European co-operation in quality assurance; this is key to making the EHEA attractive on the international stage Promotion of partnership activities and curriculum development between higher education institutions in Europe, and the establishment of Joint Degrees Commitment to Lifelong Learning 2

3 Bologna action lines 1.Adoption of a system of easily readable and comparable degrees 2.Adoption of a system essentially based on two cycles[13] 3.Establishment of a system of credits 4.Promotion of mobility 5.Promotion of European co-operation in quality assurance 6.Promotion of the European dimension in higher education 7.Focus on lifelong learning 8.Greater inclusion of higher education institutions and students in the Bologna Process 9.Promotion of the attractiveness of the European Higher Education Area 10.Doctoral studies and the synergy between the European Higher Education Area and the European Research Area 3

4 European Commission/EACEA/Eurydice, 2015. The European Higher Education Area in 2015: Bologna Process Implementation Report. Luxembourg: Publications Office of the European Union. (p. 25) 4

5 Bologna Process and Quality Assurance

6 European Standards and Guidelines (ESG) Prepared by E4 Group: all key stakeholders in European QA and adopted in 2005 by 46 countries Provide a framework for good practice shared in the whole EHEA to guarantee quality of -Educational activities of HEIs (part 1 – IQA within HEIs) -Organisation of agencies’ work and activities (part 2 – EQA of HE) -External evaluation of agencies (part 3 – operation of QA agencies, almost identical to ENQA membership criteria) 3 interlinked parts Follow the format of a standard, followed by guidelines  interpretation Introduced a peer review system for QA agencies. Operations of the agency ESG Pt 3 External QA processes that agency operates on HEIs ESG Pt 2 Internal QA processes operating within HEIs ESG Pt 1

7 ESG: purposes They set a common framework for quality assurance systems for learning and teaching at European, national and institutional level; They enable the assurance and improvement of quality of higher education in the European higher education area; They support mutual trust, thus facilitating recognition and mobility within and across national borders; They provide information on quality assurance in the EHEA. p. 7

8 Main principles and values of the ESG Twin-purpose of QA: ccountability and enhancement HEIs have primary responsibility for quality and QA Transparency and external expertise in QA processes Encourage culture of quality within HEIs Processes to demonstrate accountability Efficient & effective organisational structures for provision and support of programmes Diversity and innovation Interests of society safeguarded

9 Expectations for HEIs It is up to each institution to develop its own quality culture and to put in place policies, strategies and systems adapted to its situation, mission, context and ambition. The HEIs’ quality assurance mechanisms have to satisfy their proper needs but also the expectations of their partners and stakeholders. The first set of standards clarifies the goals. Internal evaluation is the corner stone of QA in HE.the corner stone of QA in HE

10 Expectations towards policy makers in EHEA Governments need to look into why (if) they do not have an ESG compliant quality assurance agency at the moment, and what would be required to establish one. Every country should strive towards the establishment of an independent quality assurance agency, and to make sure that each agency’s operations (including those already existing) are in line with the ESG. The revised ESG may impose legal changes in some countries, and therefore their effective implementation depends not only on the quality assurance agencies and higher education institutions, but also on the policy makers (  This could for example concern the publication of review reports, which is currently not possible in some countries - i.e. reports with negative review outcomes are not being published). 10

11 Expectations for agencies In order to be recognised as trustworthy,need to prove that fulfil the requirements of the ESG for external quality assurance agencies (ESG Part 3)(ESG Part 3) External evaluation is a condition of the credibility of the results of the internal evaluation External evaluators (QA agencies) are accountable for the quality of their activities Use procedures that comply with the ESG for the external quality assurance of higher education (ESG Part 2)(ESG Part 2) Verify the HEIs’ achievements against the ESG for internal quality assurance (ESG Part 1)(ESG Part 1) 11

12 Bologna Process and Qualifications Frameworks

13 EQF for Lifelong Learning (an EC initiative) (27 countries) EQF for Higher Education (Bologna Process - 48 countries) National Qualifications Frameworks Sectoral Qualifications Frameworks TUNING reference points for Higher Education programmes Dublin descriptors European perspective: Qualifications frameworks Role of Qualifications Frameworks

14 Bologna (QF-EHEA) Adopted 2005 48 countries Higher education only, 3 cycles Level 6, 180-240 ECTS Level 7, 60 – 120 ECTS Level 8, ???? (with possibility for intermediate qualifications in national frameworks – level 5) ECTS: 60 credits/year, 1 Credit 25-30 h of student workload EQF Lifelong learning Adopted 2008 27 countries All levels of education in a lifelong learning perspective 8 levels Without any credit ranges Three categories: Knowledge Skills Competences (social competences, abilities)

15 Statements of what a learner is expected to know, understand and be able to demonstrate after completion of learning. HE: They are expressed in curricula, modules, course descriptions, educational standards, qualifications and assessment standards. Learning outcomes specify the requirements for award of credit. Work context: Occupational standards and profiles, job profiles, job advertisements, performance and recruiting systems Personal context: curriculum vitae or personal competence profiles [HE learning outcomes are to be formulated by academic staff] Language of the Qualifications frameworks: Learning outcomes – widely understood


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